Skip to content

Spanish reading exercises / A1 level

🎯 Comprehension Lab · A1

A1 Spanish Reading Exercises

A1 reading exercises focus on present-tense verbs, morning routines, and concrete everyday vocabulary. Here, you'll read about Pedro's breakfast routine, practice key verbs like 'despertarse' and 'ducharse', and test your understanding with three basic multiple-choice questions.

Targeted features

What you get in this comprehension lab

Everything below is browser-based, interactive, and tuned for CEFR A1 active recall practice.

A1 exercises

Practice quizzes at this level

Read the passage in Spanish first, then answer the questions from memory. Review the sentence-anchored explanations to lock in the grammar pattern.

A1 Beginner Exercise 1

El Desayuno de Pedro

Pedro se a las siete de la mañana. Primero, va a la cocina y su desayuno favorito. Pedro come tostadas con mantequilla y bebe un de naranja. También le gusta tomar un café con leche. Después de , Pedro lee el periódico en la mesa de la cocina. A las ocho, se ducha y se viste para ir al . Pedro dice que el desayuno es la comida más importante del día.

Show English Translation

Pedro wakes up at seven in the morning. First, he goes to the kitchen and prepares his favorite breakfast. Pedro eats toast with butter and drinks an orange juice. He also likes to have a coffee with milk. After having breakfast, Pedro reads the newspaper at the kitchen table. At eight, he showers and gets dressed to go to work. Pedro says that breakfast is the most important meal of the day.

Comprehension Questions

1. ¿A qué hora se despierta Pedro?

2. ¿Qué come Pedro en el desayuno?

3. ¿Qué hace Pedro después de desayunar?

Vocabulary recap

despertarse - to wake up
preparar - to prepare
zumo - juice
desayunar - to have breakfast
trabajo - work, job

Level dossier · A1

True beginner

A1 Beginner reading exercises

Daily-routine Spanish at sentence-by-sentence pace — every line under twelve words so meaning lands the first time.

Field sample "Pedro se despierta a las siete de la mañana. Primero, va a la cocina y prepara su desayuno favorito."

This level is right if you Recognize 200–500 high-frequency Spanish words and can read sentences up to 12 words long without translating.

Exercise
1
Questions
3
Avg. words
75
Time budget
~3 min

Grammar focus

  • Simple present
  • Reflexive verbs
  • Definite & indefinite articles

What you'll practice

  • 01 Present-tense verbs in concrete daily contexts
  • 02 Reflexive verbs (despertarse, ducharse, vestirse)
  • 03 Time expressions and basic time-of-day vocabulary
  • 04 Recognizing high-frequency nouns (café, trabajo, cocina) from context

The method

Three passes turn one passage into deep practice

Every exercise follows the same compact loop. Sticking to the order is what separates skimming from real comprehension — and what makes 8 minutes of reading stick for a week.

  1. Step 01

    Read the Spanish once for gist

    Skim the passage end-to-end before you look at the questions. Aim for 60–70 percent understanding on this first pass — context-based reading is the muscle the exercise is designed to build, not word-by-word translation.

  2. Step 02

    Answer the questions from memory

    Commit to an answer before scrolling back to the passage. Active recall raises retention roughly two-fold versus passive re-reading (Cepeda et al., 2006). The explanation reveals the exact sentence that supports the correct choice.

  3. Step 03

    Recycle the vocabulary row

    Open the vocabulary panel after you finish the quiz. Say each word aloud, then write one new sentence that mimics how the passage used it. That layer turns one passage into reading, recall, and lexical reps in roughly 8 minutes.

Time budget: 5–10 minutes per exercise at A1–A2 and 10–15 minutes at B1–B2. Doing 3–5 short exercises per week tends to outperform a single 60-minute session because spacing reinforces vocabulary across multiple memory traces.

Ready to read

Start reading A1 Spanish stories

MeloLingua graded readers with translation support and glossed vocabulary. Browse the full A1 tier →

Illustration for the A1 story "El Café de la Mañana": . Setting cues: bakery-cafe.
A1 1 min · 6 words Spanish + translation

El Café de la Mañana

Cada mañana, María despierta a las siete con el aroma del café. Ella sonríe al sol que entra por la ventana.

despierta cocina +4
Read this A1 story
Illustration for the A1 story "El Mercado": . Setting cues: family-call, bakery-cafe.
A1 1 min · 6 words Spanish + translation

El Mercado

Pedro visits a bustling market on a vibrant Saturday morning, seeking fresh ingredients for a delicious homemade soup.

mercado lleno +4
Read this A1 story
Illustration for the A1 story "El Parque": . Setting cues: family-call.
A1 1 min · 6 words Spanish + translation

El Parque

Sofía and Max enjoy a vibrant Sunday at the park, filled with playful encounters and serene moments.

perro árboles +4
Read this A1 story
Illustration for the A1 story "El puesto de churros": Luciana follows the smell of hot oil and discovers how to order sweets at a plaza stall without hesitation.
A1 1 min · 6 words Spanish + translation

El puesto de churros

Luciana sigue el aroma del aceite caliente y descubre cómo pedir dulces en un puesto de la plaza sin titubear.

aceite caliente carrito +4
Read this A1 story
Illustration for the A1 story "La Cena": . Setting cues: bakery-cafe, family-call.
A1 1 min · 6 words Spanish + translation

La Cena

Tonight, the Rodríguez family prepares a special dinner. The grandmother makes her famous paella. The grandfather sets the table with white plates and crystal glasses.

cena abuela +4
Read this A1 story
Illustration for the A1 story "Mi Nuevo Vecino": . Setting cues: family-call.
A1 1 min · 6 words Spanish + translation

Mi Nuevo Vecino

Hoy llega un nuevo vecino al edificio. Carlos trae consigo una caja grande y un gato curioso. "Hola, soy Carlos," dice con una sonrisa.

vecino edificio +4
Read this A1 story
Illustration for the A1 story "Una llamada a mamá": After work, Marcos calls home for two minutes—and still learns three useful everyday phrases.
A1 1 min · 5 words Spanish + translation

Una llamada a mamá

After work, Marcos calls home for two minutes—and still learns three useful everyday phrases.

hirviendo colgar el abrigo +3
Read this A1 story

Answers

Spanish A1 Exercises — FAQ

Direct answers on grammar topics, test design, and active recall practice.

Q01

How do A1 Spanish reading exercises help absolute beginners?

A1 exercises test simple present tense conjugation, reflexive verbs (like 'despertarse' and 'ducharse'), and everyday nouns. They help true beginners bridge the gap between recognizing random vocabulary words and understanding complete, structured sentences without getting overwhelmed.

Q02

Are multiple-choice questions useful at the beginner level?

Yes. Instead of passive reading, multiple-choice questions force active recall. They challenge you to distinguish between subject pronouns, basic verb agreements, and temporal terms (like 'primero' vs. 'después') that are easy to misinterpret.

Q03

Should I translate the whole A1 passage before answering?

Try not to. Read the passage once, using the underlined hover-glosses for unfamiliar words first. Look at the multiple-choice questions and try to locate the answers in the Spanish text before using the 'Show English Translation' accordion to check your work.

Q04

What grammar patterns are specifically tested in these A1 exercises?

A1 reading exercises focus on the simple present indicative tense, reflexive verbs representing morning routines, definite and indefinite articles, and basic sentence structures under twelve words.

Where to go next

More Spanish reading options

Keep your momentum. Toggle between pure immersion texts, reading practice, or advance to the next CEFR level when you're ready.

Keep practicing

A1 Spanish exercises on this page

Finish the comprehension lab above, then carry A1 reading into a daily habit with native audio, synchronized text, and pronunciation feedback — or explore themed stories on the Spanish hub.